<p>Has anyone done this to practice on a real SAT test without it counting?</p>
<p>You're a joke.</p>
<p>Something tells me that would be an incredibly dumb idea</p>
<p>and i thot it was a brilliant plan!</p>
<p>im sure people have tried it...</p>
<p>u know there's something called score cancellation....</p>
<p>EPIC fail.</p>
<p>Topics like these aren't necessary. You can pay 20 dollars and take 8 exams from the Blue Book if you want practice.</p>
<p>Blue Book and score cancellation make this post sound phony.</p>
<p>a friend of mine got away with it ..
It is acc smart :D .. for dumb ppl</p>
<p>Apparently there was this guy at my school who hired someone to take the SATs for him. He almost got a perfect score...</p>
<p>^ I don't have respect for people like that.</p>
<p>I second ajwchin.</p>
<p>I'm sure this is all too possible. The proctors couldn't ever check to see whether you were the real person or not. But if I found any one who did this in my school (or even if it was one of my friends) I would report it. Because it's just not fair.</p>
<p>
[quote]
Apparently there was this guy at my school who hired someone to take the SATs for him. He almost got a perfect score...
[/quote]
Apparently the collegeboard will find a difference in handwriting when the kid takes his subject test and has to sign the "agreement"</p>
<p>what if he doesn't take a subject test?</p>
<p>He wouldn't hire someone to take his reasoning test if he wasn't aiming high. To "showcase" his 2380 to Ivy's, he will have tot take subject tests.</p>
<p>So you're gonna pay $43 to take one test illegally when you could spend $13.57 to take 8 legally? Really smart...</p>